Below is a new article with a short argument for increased welfare in the mental health sector (which has at least some degree of economic clout). Quoted with 'freedom lovers' in mind:
New eyes needed on mental health - Editorial News - Gold Coast, QLD, Australia
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I always find these issues interesting given the mix of problems including the extent of autonomy, social perceptions of illness, government spending and so forth. I look forward to hearing the libertarian 'user pays' solution to this.
Whacky news source, but it had better data than some of the others I looked at:Philip Mangano, the former executive director of the US Interagency Council on Homelessness, spoke at a homelessness forum in Sydney on April 2 this year.
He made the point that investing in permanent supported housing -- not just emergency shelters -- was cheaper for governments and dramatically cut the chances of men and women returning to the streets
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Case in point, a Massachusetts program targeting the mentally ill showed that 146 clients spent a total of 46,000 days in hospital over a two year period. The annual cost of this was $9.75 million -- about 42 per cent of Massachusetts' budget for this area of health.
Basically these 146 patients were walking in and out of hospital, such was their inability to hold a place in regulated society.
But when they provided a permanent housing placement for them, the hospital days and costs associated with them dropped by a staggering 93 per cent.
New eyes needed on mental health - Editorial News - Gold Coast, QLD, Australia
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I always find these issues interesting given the mix of problems including the extent of autonomy, social perceptions of illness, government spending and so forth. I look forward to hearing the libertarian 'user pays' solution to this.